President Barack Obama tours exhibits at the White House Science Fair on April 13, 2016. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

President Barack Obama tours exhibits at the White House Science Fair on April 13, 2016. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

President Barack Obama has the future on his mind—and, soon, in a guest-edited edition of Wired magazine.

In one of his last months in office, Obama will take the time to put together what Wired called a “completely bespoke issue” focused on the theme of Frontiers, or the “next hurdles that humanity will need to overcome to move forward.” Topics for the November edition range from the personal (like precision medicine) and local (using data in urban planning) to national (civil rights), international (climate change), and final frontiers (space travel).

“We want to wrestle with the idea of how today’s technology can influence political leadership,” Wired editor in chief Scott Dadich said in a post announcing the issue. “And who better to help us explore these ideas than President Obama?”

It is hardly the president’s first foray into publishing; Obama recently published a long and personal essay on feminism in Glamour, blogged about the Supreme Court nomination at SCOTUSblog, and became the first sitting president to publish an academic paper, with a scholarly article on health care reform in the Journal of the American Medical Association. And last year, he wrote a column while Michelle Obama held a guest editing role at More magazine.

The November issue of Wired will be available on tablet editions and some newsstands starting on October 18. The White House is also hosting a conference inspired by the issue in Pittsburgh on October 13.